Williamson v Bendigo and Adelaide Bank Ltd
[2021] FCA 451
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2021-05-03
Before
Griffiths J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
The application for an extension of time and supporting affidavit 14 Mr Williamson, who is a retired solicitor and represented himself, filed an affidavit sworn by him on 29 March 2021 in support of his application. Mr Williamson's draft notice of appeal raised the following five proposed grounds of appeal: 1. In the proceedings in the Supreme Court of NSW under number 2015/226349 the witness Mrs Diana Moran did not know who lived on Mountain Ash Road. Williamson depended on her as she had been the Secretary for the Rural Lifestyle Residents Action Group in Bungonia. 2. It was only in May/June 2020 that he learned that there was a written record. 3. The record of Mrs Carmichael's status as the only person who lived on Mountain Ash Road was confirmed and it became apparent that Mr Hannan had lied. 4. Prior to that Williamson's assertions about the claimed stop by Mr Hannan on Mountain Ash Road were rejected. 5. So there was no relevant delay in bringing the claim for set-off. 15 In his affidavit, Mr Williamson deposed that "it seemed silly" to appeal Judge Driver's judgment when he had not received the details of a proposed class action "which had been promised to bring justice to myself and thousands of others". He said that the position changed when he received a letter dated 22 March 2021 relating to that potential class action. In particular, he said that the letter informed him that lawyers had been retained and they were looking at a potential legal action against the respondent in relation to the loans it bought from Great Southern, including Mr Williamson's loans. Mr Williamson was asked in the letter to provide information relating to the total amount borrowed by him to invest in the Great Southern projects, whether there was more than one project and how much he had already paid out to the respondent. 16 In his affidavit, Mr Williamson sought to explain the bases for his counter-claim. First, in response to Judge Driver's finding that he had not taken the first opportunity to set-off the debt against the greater debt the respondent owed him, he said that if he had raised this matter in August 2015 he would not have succeeded at trial. 17 Mr Williamson elaborated upon this ground in [9]-[22] of his affidavit which, appears to be directed to providing additional material in support of the alleged misrepresentation or fraud committed by Mr Hannan (omitting annexures, emphasis in original): 9. This would have been the first point of challenge; had I said this in eg August 2015 I would not have succeeded at trial. There was a general disagreement from Mrs Moran that no one could have been there to meet with Mr Hannan because no one lived on Mountain Ash Road. Hannan had claimed to stop at someone's house on Mountain Ash Road. He was anonymous. He claimed to have been an "organiser". He said that there was to be a quarry which CEAL were applying for and all sorts of dust and noise would result. Hannan claimed to pass that on to me. His affidavit was totally false. Except he did not mention the signs which had been up on the Old School House. They were massive. So he drove right past where they would have been. Yet he knew they were there generally because Mrs McGinity said that they were there from 2005 until July 2007 and he had been coming to the village fairly often since his appointment in August 2006 as selling agent for Reevesdale. 10. So the signs were taken down to achieve a sale of the property. 11. Mrs McGinity gave evidence that the signs had not come down and the first decision relied on her evidence. 12. But they must have been down or otherwise Mr Hannan would have stopped and pointed the signs out. Not that he would have needed to because the signs were so big. So Hannan had organised for the signs to be taken down for a very short time. Mrs McGinity had not noticed and she gave evidence as if the signs had never come down. Elders knew very well that the signs were down. However, it did not stop them relying on Mrs McGinity's late-produced evidence that they were up. 13. So Elders had a bet each way when they got Mrs McGinity's evidence. Hannan said the signs were down and she said that they were up. 14. It became absolutely clear that Mrs McGinity was wrong when Mrs Moran gave the digitised evidence to me which she did in May 2020. Before that His Honour Justice Johnson had decided that there was too much indefinition around whether or not anyone lived on Mountain Ash Road. He did not hold that anyone lived there or not but he accepted Elders' evidence. 15. The digitised evidence was produced and actioned in June 2020. That was just in time for the hearing in 2019/286765 before His Honour Justice Bellew. He dismissed the proceedings except he allowed a vexatious litigant application to be brought against me. 16. What the digitised record achieved was to confirm that Mrs Carmichael was the only person who lived on Mountain Ash Road and had been an "organiser" of the Rural Lifestyle Residents Action Group ("RLRAG"). A copy of the digitised record is at annexure "HFAW1". She is mentioned in the record of the meeting on 24 February 2007. 17. So Mr Hannan, the Elders' agent, had been lying. He could not have met anyone on Mountain Ash Road. At annexure "HFAW2" is a "fleetlists" publication which states that Mr Carmichael had run several routes by bus but had died in 1995. Since then the route between Bungonia and Marulan had been run by Mrs Carmichael. So Mrs Carmichael had a real interest in what happened on Jerrara Road and therefore had got herself on RLRAG. However, she was the only person who was on RLRAG and who lived on Mountain Ash Road. 18. At annexure "HFAW3" are several emails being those that sought the addresses of the members of RLRAG and the responses. Me to Diana Moran dated 27 June 2020 (asking for confirmation of where the "organisers" lived as at 10 April 2007). Diane to me dated 28 June 2020 stating the various addresses (none were in the direction of Mountain Ash Road). Diane to me dated 3 July 2020 stating where each person lived (with the exception of Marlene Carmichael who lived in Mountain Ash Road). 19. The truth was that the signs had come down. They had been down for a very short time and Mrs McGinity had not noticed. Her house is blocked from any view of the Old School House fence. It was the day after Easter Monday and Mrs McGinity was lame and the signs came down after Mrs Moran had left the Old School House on 10 April 2007 to go to work in Goulburn and were down from about 9am to 11.30am. 20. This fraud was backed by Elders right up until now. Bendigo came into things in August 2009 at the earliest when they took Elders out of the name of the Bank which was to receive all of the money upon the sale of Reevesdale, thus changing Elders Rural Bank Limited into Rural Bank Limited. It had been a joint venture up till then. They took the shares in Rural Bank Limited in late 2010. But Elders still staffed the Bank. 21. Then on 27 July 2015 Bendigo's solicitors wrote a letter which "happened" to coincide with the start of the trial against my conveyancing solicitors, Carneys. It was no coincidence that Mr Hannan had on 21 April 2015, written an affidavit which Bendigo wanted covering up. 22. I am currently awaiting judgment from the NSW Supreme Court with regard to the vexatious litigant application but I believe that they will give the judgment on the basis that His Honour Justice Johnson was defrauded. 18 Secondly, Mr Williamson claimed that Judge Driver gave a bankruptcy order (sic) "on the mistaken ground that I could not take advantage of set-off because I had not brought the claim in time". Mr Williamson repeated that had he brought the claim any sooner it would not have been successful because Mrs Moran did not recall the situation that existed on Mountain Ash Road until she had cause to get the digitised record in June 2020, prior to the hearing before Bellew J. 19 Thirdly, in explaining why he had decided not to appeal, Mr Williamson again stated that if he had brought the appeal within time he could not have succeeded for the reasons given above. He then added that if he had won "I would have to account anyway for the Great Southern loan". 20 Somewhat confusingly, notwithstanding his evidence that he would have to account for the Great Southern loan, Mr Williamson then stated in his affidavit that he had never obtained a loan from Great Southern Finance Pty Ltd. He annexed to his affidavit a copy of his loan portfolio. Mr Williamson offered no further evidence regarding Great Southern or the alleged loan.